- Special thank you to Sean Sweeney (@speechtechie on Twitter) who posted an interesting series on how to use QR codes in Education, Speech Language Therapy ...
Tales of Things
Think about a school art gallery or any type of exhibition at your school. Parents are going to come enjoy all of the student creativity and hard work. Wouldn’t it be cool to attach a QR code to each piece of student work? For example, when a parent scans the QR code for their child’s work, a picture of the masterpiece appears along with additional descriptive information. That’s what Tale of Things can do.
Tag My Doc Free for educators and it allows you to add QR codes to any document regardless of whether it is posted
Give Your Surfers a Paddle Great presentation on QR Codes in Every Classroom By Cynthia Karabush NICE Conference - January 28, 2012
QR Code Art Gallery Superheros Thanks Tony Vincent
Students made posters of superheros. When the posters were done, the students wrote their stories and then used the free Audioboo app to record their stories. Audioboo is great because it automatically publishes your audio file online to your free account. I coached a few students on how to use the app, and they helped to record the rest of their classmates. We tagged the stories with the label “scshero” – you can listen to their Superhero stories here. I then used the website http://qrcode.kaywa.com/ to generate the QR codes. I dragged each code into a word processing document (I use Pages) and wrote the name of the superhero and the author next to it. Then I printed and cut out the codes and pasted them onto the posters.
QR Codes in Education
QR Codes Explained - Commoncraft Video
Good intro video to "What are QR Codes"
Crazy for QR Codes Thanks @tonyvincent
- Special thank you to Sean Sweeney (@speechtechie on Twitter) who posted an interesting series on how to use QR codes in Education, Speech Language Therapy ...
Part 1: What are QR Codes?
Part 2: Using Kaywa to Generate a QR Code
Part 3: QR Codes Using Mobile Scanning Apps and Demo
Part 4: A Lesson Plan Incorporating QR Codes
Part 5: QR Code Reader for Laptops and Desktops
Part 6: QR Code Treasure Hunt Generator
Part 7: Another Lesson Plan Using QR Codes
Part 8: Wrapping up More Ways to Use QR Codes for SLPs
Using QR Codes for Spooky Halloween Narrative Development
How to Make QR Codes More Beautiful
QR Code Scavenger Hunt Courtesy of the Daring Librarian
QR Codes in Education - Cool Idea or Not?
Live Binders: QR Codes in Education (Thanks Steve Anderson)
Four Ways QR Codes Could Revolutionize Education
No Projector? Use QR Code Slideshare to Share a Presentaton on Smart Phones
Interesting Ways to Use QR Codes in the Classroom (Thanks Tom Barrett)
Tales of Things
Think about a school art gallery or any type of exhibition at your school. Parents are going to come enjoy all of the student creativity and hard work. Wouldn’t it be cool to attach a QR code to each piece of student work? For example, when a parent scans the QR code for their child’s work, a picture of the masterpiece appears along with additional descriptive information. That’s what Tale of Things can do.
Tag My Doc Free for educators and it allows you to add QR codes to any document regardless of whether it is posted
Auto Generate QR Codes in a Google Spreadsheet Thanks @tonyvincent
Everything You Need to Know about QR Codes Mobile News
Give Your Surfers a Paddle Great presentation on QR Codes in Every Classroom By Cynthia Karabush NICE Conference - January 28, 2012
QR Code Art Gallery Superheros Thanks Tony Vincent
Students made posters of superheros. When the posters were done, the students wrote their stories and then used the free Audioboo app to record their stories. Audioboo is great because it automatically publishes your audio file online to your free account. I coached a few students on how to use the app, and they helped to record the rest of their classmates. We tagged the stories with the label “scshero” – you can listen to their Superhero stories here. I then used the website http://qrcode.kaywa.com/ to generate the QR codes. I dragged each code into a word processing document (I use Pages) and wrote the name of the superhero and the author next to it. Then I printed and cut out the codes and pasted them onto the posters.
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